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WHS Law Briefing
Welcome to our WHS Law Briefing. This briefing identifies key issues and emerging trends in WHS Law, and details significant legislative and case law developments from February to date in July 2025.
China | Publication | July 2025
On 1 May 2025, the People’s Bank of China (the PBOC) issued the Administrative Measures on Data Security in the Business Areas supervised by the PBOC (the PBOC Data Rules) which took effect on 30 June 2025. The PBOC Data Rules are the first set of comprehensive rules issued by the PBOC which systematically regulate data security in the business areas supervised by the PBOC.
The PBOC Data Rules have been long anticipated by the market, given a draft version was issued for public consultation about two years ago and the PBOC’s sister regulator, the National Financial Regulatory Administration, already issued its own data rules in December 2024 (the NFRA Data Rules) - please refer to our previous article NFRA’s first data privacy and security regulations issued. Amongst others, these PBOC Data Rules impose detailed obligations and legal consequences on Data Handlers (defined below) who must review the regime against their daily operations to ensure full compliance.
The PBOC Data Rules apply to licensed financial institutions and other institutions whose incorporation is subject to the approval of the PBOC or which are otherwise recognised by the PBOC (the Data Handlers).
Network data generated and collected within the PBOC supervised business areas, which must not involve state secrets, is regulated (the Business Data).
Business areas are not further defined in the PBOC Data Rules. However, according to PBOC officers’ public response to reporters, such business areas refer to monetary credit, macro-prudential oversight, cross-border RMB, inter-bank market, comprehensive statistics of financial industry, payment and settlement, RMB issuance and circulation, treasury management, credit investigation and credit rating, and anti-money laundering. Clearly, this is a pretty wide scope which will have broad implications on the business operations of all types of financial institutions and most non-financial institutions carrying out designated financial services related business in China.
The PBOC Data Rules classify the Business Data into three levels: general data, important data and core data. This generally aligns with the data classification under the NFRA Data Rules (although the NFRA Data Rules further classify the general data into sensitive data and other general data).
“Core data” and “important data” are generally defined same under the PBOC Data Rules and the NFRA Data Rules, i.e. “core data” refers to important data with high coverage in respect of fields, groups or regions, or with high accuracy, a relatively large scale and a certain depth, which, once illegally used or shared, may directly affect political security, and “important data” refers to data of specific fields, specific groups or specific regions, or data reaching a certain level of accuracy and scale, which, once tampered with, destroyed, leaked or illegally accessed or used, may directly endanger national security, economic operation, social stability, public health and security.
As the NFRA Data Rules, both “core data” and “important data” defined under the PBOC Data Rules fall within the “important data” category under China’s existing cybersecurity and data privacy regime (the Existing Data Regime), and therefore processing these data will be subject to stringent requirements and obligations. Also, unless otherwise specified, all protection obligations applied on “important data” under these PBOC Data Rules shall be extended to “core data”.
The PBOC will determine the specific catalogue of “important data”, based on which a Data Handler is required to accurately identify and declare whether all its stored business data fall within the scope of “core data” or “important data”. After the PBOC collects and reconciles all information received from the Data Handlers, the PBOC will determine who are the Data Handlers of “important data” and notify the relevant Data Handlers accordingly.
Each Data Handler must establish a catalogue of Business Data which must be updated annually and classified on the basis of business relevance, sensitivity and usability:
Pursuant to the PBOC Data Rules, Data Handlers are subject to the following requirements when managing the entire lifecycle of Business Data:
The PBOC Data Rules have also set out clear guidance on how Data Handlers shall deal with security risks and incidents relating to the Business Data. These will require Data Handlers to strengthen their risk monitoring of Business Data processing activities and fulfill the required reporting or assessment/audit procedures. For example:
Publication
Welcome to our WHS Law Briefing. This briefing identifies key issues and emerging trends in WHS Law, and details significant legislative and case law developments from February to date in July 2025.
Publication
In Roberts Co (NSW) Pty Ltd v Sharvain Facades Pty Ltd (Administrators Appointed) [2025] NSWCA 161, the NSW Court of Appeal has found that, for the purposes of the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW) (SoP Act), a deeming clause providing that a notice given after 5pm is to be treated as having been given and received at 9am on the next business day, does not extend the statutory time period for service of a payment schedule.
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